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Tool chest review - Sears, Tractor Supply, Lowes, Home Depot, Harbor Freight

Mister Moose

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As if there aren’t enough threads already on Harbor Freight tool cabinets. I think this offers new material, so I started a new thread.

I initially set out to compare 26” roll away tool chests, and in the process looked at the 41 inch series as well. I don’t use my tools to make money, but I do maintain and fix most everything I own, and it was time to consolidate my tool collection into a well constructed chest, but I knew I didn’t want to spend thousands. In researching on line I kept coming across a wealth of information here on Garage Journal that was a big help. Nothing better than reading some real life experiences from actual users of these chests. Many of the reviews were quite subjective though. This one felt better than that one. This one seemed like it could hold more weight than that one. While I agree, you can feel the difference in some cases, use over time loaded up would tell much more than feel. I wanted to know what construction was under the covers. They all look the same from the outside. Shiny paint, casters, full width silver pulls. So armed with a camera, calipers, and the willingness to take chests apart on the showroom floor, I set out to discover what was the best consumer grade tool chest out there for the money. Well, in my neck of New England, anyway. And because stumbling onto this forum was so useful, I’ll pay it forward and share in detail what I found.

This information reflects what was in stores in April and May of 2012. Older cabinet construction may be different. I looked at Sams and Costco, but there were no tool boxes when I was in.

Sears.
I thought this was where I would end up. The Craftsman name was generally well respected, the no nonsense warranty was great, and they have as good a chance as anyone to be around for a long time in the future. My wife actually started this whole foray by buying me a 26” 5 drawer Quiet Glide rollaway for my birthday. (Note: Any wife that buys her husband a tool chest for his birthday confirms that you indeed married the right woman) The tool chest was waiting for me to pick up a few towns away. She explained that she was going to buy the ball bearing model, but this (Quiet Glide) cost more and the salesman said it was better. I was immediately skeptical, and started looking at the inside of tool chests at Sears.

Long story short, there is a horrific low grade of “Basic” ball bearing tool boxes at Sears. They are almost as bad as the black cheapos at Harbor Freight, and it is true they are less expensive than the Quiet Glide models. They aren’t even worth reviewing. They are confusing, as there is very little to tell them apart from the more mainstream, better built (regular) ball bearing models. I passed on the ‘Quiet Glide’ models as well as they are nothing more than some plastic runners on steel sliders. My wife said “No problem, I’ll cancel the one I ordered and you can pick out the one you want.” Cool.

Ball Bearing.
The (regular) ball bearing series is fairly flimsy. The drawers are made of the 2nd thinnest material in the field I reviewed. Only the awful black tool boxes at Harbor Freight were thinner. There is a lot of wobble to the deeper drawers. There is no top drawer edge reinforcement as many others have. The height of the drawer slides is second worst, and the casters are the very worst; 4½“ plastic wheels on a simple axle with no bearing. The deeper drawers still only have one slide. Caster reinforcement is somewhat typical with a sheet metal channel doubled up with one edge bent to an ‘L’ shape on only one side. The boxes were expensive for the quality, a 5 drawer 26” base was 265 on ‘sale’ from 379. These things are always on sale. 4 drawer was 255/319.

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The disappointing worst in the field plastic caster.

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Sears smaller 1 1/16” slides, 12 pairs ball bearings.

Grip Latch.
This is a further disappointment. I expected this series to be better built, but for the most part it isn’t. The grip latch is a good idea, and it works…. sort of good. I saw a floor model where the grip latch failed. The hinge is nothing more than a tab through a slot with the two ends of the tab bent into ears. The ears had failed on the floor model and the handle was loose, flopping at an angle and not gripping the latch. The weight of the handle keeps a little sheet metal barb locked in the slide frame, until you lift the handle. A nice feature, most of them work fine, and under light duty use it would probably last. The drawer slides are upgraded to a more industry standard 1 3/8”, but the drawers are the same thin un-reinforced drawers that are in the regular ball bearing models. The box construction is the same. You get upgraded to a 5” cheap plastic caster. The handle for all these cabinets is just a piece of pipe, crimp bent and bolted on. This is the cheesiest handle I saw. The 41” 14 drawer base was on sale for 775, down from 969. That’s a lot of money, and it turns out to be very uncompetitive.

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The Grip Latch caster. $775, and still a cheesy plastic wheel on an axle caster.

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How the Grip Latch works. Better 1 3/8 12 pair bearing slides, but same non reinforced drawer.

Heavy Duty Limited Edition.
This sounds very impressive. It’s nothing more than a ball bearing chest with the 1 3/8” slides, but no grip latch.

Stainless Steel series.
Like the grip latch, but with riveted on stainless drawer fronts.

Pro Series.
This was talked about in this forum, but there were no floor models to look at.

All the floor models are overpriced, underbuilt disappointments. I’m fine with their hand tools, but the chests and roller cabinets are not worth the price, not by a long shot. The tool chest buyer at Sears should be publicly run out of town.

Home Depot.
Nothing to see here. Worse than Sears. The same box construction as Sears, same recessed side wall, small slides, flimsy drawers, but there was no reinforcing visible at all at the base for the casters. Visions of the cabinet floor buckling at the caster with any weight added. No good at any price, which by the way was a lot less than Sears. At least Home Depot priced their junk appropriately. $169 for a 5 drawer base, $259 for a 6 drawer base. You even get an MDF work top. Although not on the one in the photo, it must have went on walkabout.

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2nd Cheapest of the cheap. Run.


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Home Depot at a different store also had a 5 drawer 42” stainless cabinet. This is different than the Sears/Waterloo construction. All drawer fronts are full width over the frame Euro cabinet style on 1 3/8 slides, but the sheet metal is still too lightweight. $349

Tractor Supply
They carry 2 lines, Jobsmart, and Masterhand.

Jobsmart is just like the Sears ball bearing series, except it’s black, and the slides are smaller. There are only 8 pairs of ball bearings per 1” high slide, the worst in the group. OK, it’s not like Sears, it’s worse.

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Jobsmart 26” chest set. Looks identical to Masterhand from the outside.

Masterhand is better. The drawers are from the same stock, but the top edge is rolled over double to stiffen the drawer. The slides are 1 3/8” with 12 pairs of ball bearings, and have a detent. The deep drawer has 2 slides, where Jobsmart had 1 slide. The two look identical from the outside. The really odd part is that they are priced the same. That’s right, you can get cheapo drawers and slides or decent ones for the same money at the same store. The 26 inch 8 drawer base is $329, and the 40” 12 drawer base is $499. Comes with an MDF top as well. These cabinets are apparently sold at other stores in other parts of the country under the same names.

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Masterhand 42” cabinet. Behind to the left is the Jobsmart 41” cabinet. Outwardly identical, same price.

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Masterhand 12 pair roller bearing cage

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Masterhand & Jobsmart caster. Better hard rubber, hard to tell the bearing type with the shield in place.
 
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Mister Moose

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Lowes.
Lowes has several series on the floor. Having looked at enough lightweight offerings, I didn’t pay too much attention to the two lines that were the cheapest (Task Force). They were locked with no keys to be seen, and I couldn’t see inside. One drawer was open on the Task Force and I could see it was just a 1” slide like the cheapest Sears box. Maybe they were locked on purpose?

27” Kobalt base cabinet.
This comes in 2 flavors in the store, a few more on line. The 6 drawer base is $340, the 4 drawer is $239. The construction is the best so far. Instead of a ‘L’ channel supporting the casters, there is a second bend in the plate forming a ‘U’ channel. Much stronger. The drawer stock is thicker than all the previously reviewed chests. (See the table below for a listing of all sheet metal thicknesses in the various brands) The slides are the bigger 1 3/8, with 12 pairs of ball bearings. The casters are beefy 2x5 ball bearing urethane tired ones with a nice big fat plate for your toe brake pedal. There is an outgoing older series built the same but with thin a la Sears drawer pulls, the newer ones are thick pulls. There are several unique features like beveled corners on the box, a power strip on the right side, and a molded top that is recessed to take either a 12” or 18” top chest, and has a few screwdriver and cup holders. The deep 8” drawer on the 4 drawer base has 2 sets of slides. The detents on it are noticeablely stiffer. Good for keeping the drawers closed, not so good for easy opening. There is a stainless version of this if you want the upgrade.

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The inside. Notice the double gusset ‘U’ channel reinforcing the caster attach points. 12 pair bearing cage. This caster is better, but there was one I saw at a different store with an even better caster and brake, the assembly part source isn’t consistent. The sign says “double wall construction”, but it isn’t, it is reinforced in spots single wall. Their stainless version was true double wall.



41” Kobalt Stainless base cabinet.
There is no 41” painted cabinet, only stainless. The drawers here have rolled over top edges, much stiffer. 6” drawers have one slide, deeper than that they have 2 slides. The slides are 1 3/8 with 12 pairs of ball bearings. The box construction is true full height double wall. Detents on the drawers feels slightly easier, but that could be not consistent, as the slides appear identical. The drawer stock is .0435” stainless steel. The 11 drawer base is $610, the 9 drawer top chest is $470. On my most recent trip to Lowes the 41” box was marked down to $485. Not sure if that’s a local or national sale.

I wouldn’t spend the $610 on the 41” model, (Double the 27”) but I was seriously considering the 6 drawer 27” model. Hopefully a Lowes coupon would hit my mailbox sometime soon. In the process of reading tool cabinet reviews on line, I stumbled upon this forum and the big following of the Harbor Freight boxes.

Harbor Freight.
I had my share of bad harbor freight experiences, and knew what the usual offering was. I have a 36” bench top sander of theirs that works, but the tracking is iffy, the hardware is cheap, and the belt goes thump thump thump every revolution. I hadn’t even considered the place until i started reading good reviews here.

So on the advice of you folks, I stroll in. The black 30” 11 drawer set is scary. Just what you expect at Harbor Freight. It was the worst of any I looked at. The drawer stock is only .027” and feels like you can bend it with your fingers. Sticky steel slides, no ball bearings. Run from this one.

26” set, 16 drawer combo.
Available only as a matched set, this is currently priced at $359, with coupons out there for less (I’ve seen $300). The drawer slides are an odd 1 1/8” size, and have 14 pairs of ball bearings on a 6.5” cage. The drawer stock is .0415, the same as Kobalt. Casters are standard quality 2”x5” reinforced with a single bend .065” ‘L’ plate. Box walls are .051”. Deep drawers have only 1 slide.

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26” HF caster. Single gusset ‘L’ channel reinforcement underneath. Caster looks like the Masterhand type.

44” 13 drawer base cabinet.
Otherwise known as the favorite child of a large percentage of Garage Journal members. Currently priced at $389 with $349 and $359 coupons in circulation. This has the 1 3/8 drawer slides, but where most are pressed or snapped in using detents, these are riveted in and are tight. The pressed in ones in other brands are loose and wiggle a little. Top 4” and bottom 6” drawers have dual slides. The rest of the drawers are 3”. The slides are 14 pairs of ball bearings on 7 inch cages with a comfortable amount of detent on closing. Better than the more expensive Kobalt. Drawer stock (and the case) is .052”, the thickest sheet metal of any store brand tool box out there. Drawer top edges are doubled over. Full dual wall box construction. Underneath, instead of the sheetmetal ‘U’ channel, there is 1/8” angle iron welded around the perimeter, and to support the casters 2 additional pairs of 1/8” angle iron is welded to the frame to bolt the casters to. This is a quantum jump up in box strength. The casters show it, they are steel core 5” wheel with a hard polyurethane tire, a 3/8” axle, and ball bearings on the swivel, both with zerc fittings. There are no bearings on the axle however, it is just a greased axle in a steel sleeve. This is the low point of this box, the caster on the 5 drawer cart for $150 has 2 sealed ball bearings supporting the axle. Why didn’t they use that system here?

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Lower drawer with double slides, riveted to drawer. Look at the left side upper edge, the rolled over reinforcement is visible. Lesser drawers don’t have this. Also, look at the drawer front. Both the top drawer pull and the lower edge of the front form a structural girder that allows more weight before deforming.

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The 14 pair roller bearing cage. Full double wall construction.

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The steel wheel caster with polyurethane tire. You can also see the other style casters on the 56” and the 5 drawer cart. Look at the dual angle iron supports & perimeter angle iron welded to the cabinet, and compare that to the ‘U’ channel visible on the 5 drawer cart.

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The steel swivel caster, mediocre brake (The 57” one is far better) and visible zerc grease fitting for the axle. There is also one for the swivel.

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The caster laid out for you to see. There is a hard rubber bushing in between the steel wheel and the steel sleeve the axle rides in. I’m not planning on rolling mine around much. If you are, I’d think about upgrading the casters, or be aware they might not roll as easy as time goes by and the box gets heavier.

57” 11 drawer base cabinet. To the above add a finger latch to each drawer, upgrade to even beefier .061” drawer and box stock, and even bigger casters. $799.

So for me, the choice came down to a reasonably well constructed Kobalt box that is 27” wide for $340 (or less if I can get a coupon or find a sale), or a 44” wide Harbor Freight box for $349. Hmmm. Better construction, and 63% more storage for nine dollars. This is a no brainer. I bought the HF 44” box.

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Unloading out of the pick-up was a snap with a skid steer, just slide it into the bucket!



Matco
Just to compare to a higher end tool truck box, I measured up a 40” Matco box at a mechanic shop I do business with. The drawer slides were the same 1 3/8 tall slides, but they had 16 pairs of ball bearings. The drawer stock was .050, same as HF. The corner posts of the box were a thick .108. The thicker corner posts and the extra pair of ball bearings in the slides were the only 2 notable differences in construction I could see. Knowing what I do about Chinese metallurgy, I would expect the Matco welding quality to be superior, but I had no way to verify that. It is a very deep breath to pay the extra tool truck price, but you do get on site service, a better warranty, financing to make it seem palatable, and you won’t have to peel the name plate off in shame. You will however pay dearly for that name plate.

This whole name plate shame thing really should stop if in fact HF has built a high quality box and offers it with no expensive commissioned salesman in a truck to the vast unwashed masses of us garage folk.

Here’s most of the details distilled down in a easily compared summary:

7356314254_3304d43651_z.jpg



Those of you that say Sears has better cabinets than Harbor Freight haven’t been to Sears and Harbor Freight lately. I wasn't able to review models others have noted from Costco or Sam's Club as they had no models in stock when I visited.

UPDATE: New Home Depot model - see post #192 in this thread.
 
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sselander

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I was actually in a Sears store for the first time in fifteen plus years a few days ago.
The boxes were very disappointing as you pointed out.
I was fortunate to get mine in the early 90's when one of the Sears closed up.

Pic is the exact model that I have, not mine though.

.
 

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mark40sw

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My HF boxes had casters with roller bearings. That side plastic washer pushes out and a cage containing the rollers is there, unless HF changed this in the last few years.

I also removed that odd grease fitting, retapped to standard grease fitting.
 

archirelic

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This is an excellent write-up for anyone interested in purchasing their first tool chest!
 

shoturtle

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That is the best thing in the whole HF store, their US General boxes. The Large ones in particular the 44 and 57.

For truck brand, I would go with a mac. They are not as expensive as so or the matco ones.
 
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zjrog

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Hmmm, I got the 44" box and saw the zerc fitting and thought the casters were ball bearing throughout. Not that it moves much. Awesome write up and info. Thanks for the time that that took!
 

5lima30

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Good review! I am not in the market for a tool chest but if I was it would probably be the HF US General or the TSC Masterhand. My wrenching buddy got a Masterhand last Christmas. I helped him set it up. It is also a very decent well made box and he has been very happy with his! I was impressed with the weight that the drawers would handle.
 

KEH

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Completely agree with your assessment of Sears tool boxes. When stainless rool chests started being stocked at Lowes and Sears a few years ago, I looked them over and couldn't find one that wasn't made in China. My opinion is that the quality of the stainless boxes has gone down somewhat since they were first introduced.

Some of the Sears boxes are made in China. You have to find one still packed in the cardbox the find COO.

KEH
 
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Mister Moose

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My HF boxes had casters with roller bearings. That side plastic washer pushes out and a cage containing the rollers is there, unless HF changed this in the last few years.

I also removed that odd grease fitting, retapped to standard grease fitting.

This got me curious, so I removed the caster again, and pushed out the steel sleeve a little.

You are correct, there is a roller bearing inside. Not very good quality though.

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Altough the light isn't very good, you can see the steel sleeve pushed up is not a clean shiny surface. It is rough for a bearing race.

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The roller cage is a crude plastic casting. The wheel bearing surface, or outer bearing race is not smooth or polished either. It has more the look of a casting. As bearings go, it's pretty rough. It does spin adequately, although that's with no load. It's still way better than a simple riveted axle through a solid caster, but it seems there is room for improvement here.

Perhaps owners that have had these for several years, and roll them around with some weight in them recently could weigh in on how the bearings hold up.
 
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biscuit141

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Mister Moose, not sure where you are located, but if there is a Menards nearby I would love for you to review their MasterForce toolboxes. They also seem to be a high quality offering and you have gone into more detail with measurements and specs than any other review I have read. Nice work and thank you!
 

383astro

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I bought 2 of the HF 44" cabinets yesterday on the 349 coupon. I loved the red service cart I bought a couple of years ago and decided it was time to upgrade the Cman box my parents bought me about 17 years ago. Glad I did it. Its not loaded yet but everything looks great and I will be taking the casters off and building a workbench with about 36 inches in between them for a spot to sit.
 

matttys

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I initially set out to compare 26” roll away tool chests. I wanted to know what construction was under the covers. They all look the same from the outside. Shiny paint, casters, full width silver pulls. So armed with a camera, calipers, and the willingness to take chests apart on the showroom floor, I set out to discover what was the best consumer grade tool chest out there for the money.

Maybe I just missed it, but what did the reviewer of the tool boxes choose for his personal tool chest? I guess that's what it all comes down to, right? What was the best compromise of cost and quality?
 
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Mister Moose

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Mister Moose, not sure where you are located, but if there is a Menards nearby I would love for you to review their MasterForce toolboxes. They also seem to be a high quality offering and you have gone into more detail with measurements and specs than any other review I have read. Nice work and thank you!

Sorry, I'm in Conecticut and the nearest Menards is Ohio.

One of the reasons I wrote such a detailed review is so folks like you could read it, go into a store, and use the information to compare the box you're thinking of buying. Take out the bottom 2 drawers. Look at the slides and bearing cages. Look at the inside construction, the box walls. Look at the floor of the box both inside and out to see how the weight will be carried. Look at how a drawer is built, what reinforcing it has, if any.

I think many manufacturers take advantage of the fact that no one looks under the hood on a tool chest. Everyone just rolls a drawer in and out. This is a classic case of while you always never get what you didn't pay for, sometimes you don't get higher quality with a higher price either. One model I looked at claimed double wall construction, and wasn't. The only way you'd know is to remove a few drawers and look.

The vast number of store brands out there are confusing, and as a result the buyer frequently makes a less informed decision. If the buying public starts demanding better construction, we will see less flimsy tool boxes being offered.
 

Kevin54

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I don't know if you have a Menard's around, but don't count out their MasterForce boxes. Very well built, ball bearing slides and double ball bearing slides on the deep drawers. 44" wide, 11 drawers. I actually like the MasterForce better than the Craftsman boxes. I've looked at HF and think maybe the MasterForce is a little better built but would actually have to have one side by side to really tell. The only downfall is the green color. For the price, the HF box is a little cheaper than the Menards box which is a plus.

I had to edit this. The Menard's box is 41" and not 44". Here are the particulars on the 41" MasterForce. Current price on it is $419 down from $489 regular price. So it is about $100 more than the HF box.

41 Inch - 11 Drawer Tool Cabinet

Full extension 100 lbs ball bearing drawer slides
Secure keyed locking system (includes 2 keys)
Full width aluminum drawer pulls
Non - slip drawer liners
Long lasting powder-coat finish
Hardened steel side handles
5 in x 2 in easy-rolling polyurethane casters
Storage capacity: 16,000 cubic inches
Net weight: 218.3 lbs
Gross weight: 230.8 lbs
41-1/2''W x 40''H x 18''D
 
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matttys

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HF box.

Jim :cool:

Here's my deal. I may have a few tools from HF that do work well enough for what I need them, but I ALWAYS take the HF name off the product. I've got too many other fancy tools to have any HF brands showing off in my garage. I don't want my friends to make fun of me :headscrat
 

allinon72

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I don't know if you have a Menard's around, but don't count out their MasterForce boxes. Very well built, ball bearing slides and double ball bearing slides on the deep drawers. 44" wide, 11 drawers. I actually like the MasterForce better than the Craftsman boxes. I've looked at HF and think maybe the MasterForce is a little better built but would actually have to have one side by side to really tell. The only downfall is the green color. For the price, the HF box is a little cheaper than the Menards box which is a plus.


Definitely agree. Only thing keeping me away is the higher price and awful green color.
 

mngundog

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So on your diagram I see "draw thickness" and some are labeled "rolled edge", Iam thinking that you measured the actual thickness and you just noted that they have a rolled edge, is this correct?
 
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Mister Moose

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So on your diagram I see "draw thickness" and some are labeled "rolled edge", Iam thinking that you measured the actual thickness and you just noted that they have a rolled edge, is this correct?

Correct. There was always an un-rolled edge near the corner I could get the caliper jaws on. The table and the text refers to actual thickness of the sheet steel used for the drawer, which includes the paint thickness of course. There were several styles of drawer reinforcement. A tight 180 degree bend with a crimp - most common, a 90 degree bend inwards - usually seen on the rear of a drawer, and a 270 degree curve roll about pencil diameter that looks to me to be the strongest method.

Also, the shape of the drawer front contributes to stiffness. A flat panel is the least rigid, you will usually see at least one bend in it. The cheapest of the cheap have no bends on the drawer front other than the drawer pull. The full length drawer pull, and the formed lower edge all add to rigidity.
 

biscuit141

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Mister Moose, I just came from Sears and they had a very nice looking 33" Viper stack on sale for $8xx something. It looked to be very well constructed. Would you be interested in adding Viper to your review? It looked to be very nice, I like the drawer layout and the size was right for my garage, it is just hard to pay $800 when I can get a top and bottom 44" HF for under $600.
 

c10bonanza

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Excellent, highly informative reivew. Thanks!

I purchased a HF 44" this weekend. I looked at boxes from HF, HD, Lowes, Northern Tool, and Sears. While I didn't inspect them as closely as you did, the HF 44" "feels" so much more stout than its competitors.

The only one that came close, IMO, was the Homak Pro from Northern Tool. The 36" version is priced at a much higher premium than the HF, but the 26" Homak Pro is a bit closer. Top and bottom retail around $500 before coupons (I could have got it for $400). But, I would have also had to pay shipping since they didn't have the color I wanted. More expensive and less storage than the HF 44", plus shipping fees? That was a deal breaker for me. (If you have a Northern Tool close by, I'd be curious on your comparison of their boxes.)

I think the HF 44" is a bargain for the home wrencher, especially given the amount of storage for the price. It is a great deal of bang for the buck.
 

DCarr

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Thanks for going through all you did to get this info !!!

My Crafstman upper & lower boxes have been around since 1992 and aint goin nowhere in my life.

I have a good friend who works with me every so often and he thinks I need to get a new great big box just vecause of all the tools I have. There is no reson or need for anther box. The one I have stores my tools as good as a Lista would as far as I am concerned. I'm not out to impress anyone with my tool box.
 
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Mister Moose

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Mister Moose, I just came from Sears and they had a very nice looking 33" Viper stack on sale for $8xx something. It looked to be very well constructed. Would you be interested in adding Viper to your review? It looked to be very nice, I like the drawer layout and the size was right for my garage, it is just hard to pay $800 when I can get a top and bottom 44" HF for under $600.

I'll be happy to review it if it ever shows up at a nearby Sears store. But if you'd rather save $150 and gain 10 inches of width.... what exactly is your dilema?


I purchased a HF 44" this weekend. I looked at boxes from HF, HD, Lowes, Northern Tool, and Sears.

(If you have a Northern Tool close by, I'd be curious on your comparison of their boxes.)

Unfortunately, the nearest Northen Tool to me is 700 miles away.
 

truckman5000

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Mister Moose.
You said you live in conn. The H.F. i whent is the one in R.I.
Theres another near me. but both dont seem to have a box selection.
Maybee this has changed??? Or where is the one you go to?
 
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Mister Moose

Well-known member
Joined
May 24, 2012
Messages
131
Mister Moose.
You said you live in conn. The H.F. i whent is the one in R.I.
Theres another near me. but both dont seem to have a box selection.
Maybee this has changed??? Or where is the one you go to?

Both the HF in Vernon CT and Berlin CT have the 44 in stock, or did recently.
 

maxspeed96ct

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 6, 2012
Messages
379
I notice alot of CT guys on the garage forum :beer:

Thanks for the write up . I have a love hate relationship with HF. Some of their stuff is just so junk , and some things Ive bought with the expectation that its going to be junk and I love them !

Just a roll of the dice with each product I guess .
 

akdiesel

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 8, 2008
Messages
2,617
Location
Wasilla, AK
This a great write up you did for this field of tool chest. Appreciate it.
I have always lived by the motto "You get what you pay for". But as the quote below states of over seas products basically resulting in a cheaper and lesser quality brand may not be the complete truth. There are a lot of products that state made in America but in fact they are simply assimbled in America. More US companies have a profit sight than a trust and quality vision. From what I have heard is Sears is now having their tools made over seas as well. The over seas product quality has gotten much better. Not sure if this is due to competition or due to building standard requests from US companies.
Sorry for the side track
If the casters you mentioned will not get much use why even use them at all. Just get a small roller cart to put specific tools on and take that to the location. I like my tool chests stationary to eliminate tipping issues.


Completely agree with your assessment of Sears tool boxes. When stainless rool chests started being stocked at Lowes and Sears a few years ago, I looked them over and couldn't find one that wasn't made in China. My opinion is that the quality of the stainless boxes has gone down somewhat since they were first introduced.

Some of the Sears boxes are made in China. You have to find one still packed in the cardbox the find COO.

KEH
 
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